As Senate Passes Immigration Bill, Latinos Shout, ‘Yes We Can!’

On the day the U.S. Senate approved a sweeping immigration bill with 14
Republican votes, advocates of immigration reform demonstrate in front
of the Illinois Republican headquarters in Chicago on Thursday.
(Scott Olson / Getty Images / June 27, 2013)

"With respect to the pathway to citizenship, we should never forget that
there is a pathway to citizenship. It is followed by millions of legal
immigrants, right now, who are obeying all of our laws, respecting our
nation’s sovereignty, standing patiently in line, doing everything our
country has asked of them to do to become Americans, and they are
watching 11 million people trying to cut in line in front of them." - Representative Tom McClintock (R-CA):

WASHINGTON -- As the Senate passed the immigration reform bill, a protester dressed in a blue cap and graduation gown stood up in the visitor gallery and chanted, "Si se puede!"
Other activists dressed in turquoise and orange shirts
joined in with the chant, which in English means, "Yes we can!" Some
chanted, "Yes we can" in English as well.Maria Cabello, who was sitting nearby, said she was thinking of her
parents, who emigrated with her from Mexico to Texas 10 years ago.U.S. immigration law: Decades of debate"They're undocumented," said Cabello, who works with the United We
Dream advocacy group. "Now they're one step closer to getting
citizenship, and my mom might get to see her parents again."Cabello benefited from President Obama's
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy in October, which grants
two-year deportation deferrals and work permits for immigrants brought
into the U.S. illegally as children.She said despite her disapproval of several amendments in the Senate bill, which passed 68 to 32, she has hopes for the House vote.The bill calls for $46 billion in extra border security and also
provides a pathway to citizenship for the estimated 11 million people
who entered the country illegally or overstayed their visas."The Senate bill had a lot of outrageous amendments," she said. "So
we'll be pushing harder so the House knows that we will not support a
bill blocking our pathway to citizenship, that keeps our families from
being together, or that keeps militarizing our border."Adrienne DerVartanian of the advocacy group Farmworker Justice said
she was pleased with the vote, particularly with the inclusion of an
amendment affecting agricultural workers."We don't think the bill is perfect," she said. "There were
concessions, compromises made. We're looking forward to the next step --
it's important that it addresses our agricultural system, which is
broken."Melvin Alvarez of Alexandria, Va., said he was a bit scared of the bill's prospects."My family and I are legal residents, and I am truly lucky," said
Alvarez, who is originally from Honduras. "But I go to high school with a
lot of international students who are much brighter than me, and I
could go on to higher education and they couldn't. It's just that paper
that makes the difference."Alvarez said the deferred deportation program allowed his friends to
go back to school, and that if the House passed the Senate bill, "it
will let them keep being able to do so."For Alberto Morales, born in Chicago and the son of immigrants from Mexico, it was a historic moment."Bipartisanship is truly rare in this Congress,
and to see such leadership was fantastic, especially from the
Republican leadership that stepped up to the plate," said Morales, a
student at Georgetown University. Fourteen Republican senators supported the bill.